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"The baby will grow" : a poststructuralist and psychodynamic analysis of a community psychology intervention

Progressive South African psychologists have recognised the need for community approaches in South Africa which maximise access to psychological intervention and which value politically aware psychological practice. Few extended analyses of such interventions exist in the literature, and community p...

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Main Author: Long, Carol
Other Authors: Swartz, Sally
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Psychology 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Long, Carol
author2 Swartz, Sally
author_browse Long, Carol
Swartz, Sally
author_facet Swartz, Sally
Long, Carol
author_sort Long, Carol
collection Thesis
description Progressive South African psychologists have recognised the need for community approaches in South Africa which maximise access to psychological intervention and which value politically aware psychological practice. Few extended analyses of such interventions exist in the literature, and community psychology has been critiqued for its lack of theory. This study aims to provide an extended analysis of a community intervention conducted with a group of Primary Health Care Workers. The intervention was motivated by their request for psychological skills in order to enable them to work more effectively with their clients. Interactive workshop sessions were thus conducted by two facilitators (including the author) under supervision over a period of one year. The aim of such workshops was to instil a psychological way of thinking. This consequently implied an emphasis on the emotional world of Primary Health Care Workers. This study provides a post-structuralist and psychoanalytic analysis of the process of intervention in order to offer potential suggestions for future community work and to explore how the interface between psychoanalysis and post-structuralism may offer possibilities for more theoretically grounded community work. Particular emphasis is placed on power relations, discourse and language, and psychoanalytic understandings of relationship in order to explore the intervention as well as the implications of articulation of post-structuralism and psychoanalysis in community work. It is suggested that psychoanalysis is best utilised in community settings when it explicitly recognises socio-political influences and includes these in the object-worlds of ourselves and our clients, and when recognition of power and difference are foregrounded. A further aim involved subjecting a Foucaultian discourse analytic method (e.g. Hollway, 1989) to a practical intervention in which there are multiple texts and in which the clinician becomes the discourse analyst. Whilst this method is no doubt controversial, it offers the potential to extend the use of post-structuralist methodology to the analysis of practical therapeutic encounters beyond the typical methods of analysing written or transcribed texts. Implications of this analysis thus hold bearing on future intervention as well as on future methods of researching psychological practice.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/12606 "The baby will grow" : a poststructuralist and psychodynamic analysis of a community psychology intervention Long, Carol Swartz, Sally Clinical Psychology Progressive South African psychologists have recognised the need for community approaches in South Africa which maximise access to psychological intervention and which value politically aware psychological practice. Few extended analyses of such interventions exist in the literature, and community psychology has been critiqued for its lack of theory. This study aims to provide an extended analysis of a community intervention conducted with a group of Primary Health Care Workers. The intervention was motivated by their request for psychological skills in order to enable them to work more effectively with their clients. Interactive workshop sessions were thus conducted by two facilitators (including the author) under supervision over a period of one year. The aim of such workshops was to instil a psychological way of thinking. This consequently implied an emphasis on the emotional world of Primary Health Care Workers. This study provides a post-structuralist and psychoanalytic analysis of the process of intervention in order to offer potential suggestions for future community work and to explore how the interface between psychoanalysis and post-structuralism may offer possibilities for more theoretically grounded community work. Particular emphasis is placed on power relations, discourse and language, and psychoanalytic understandings of relationship in order to explore the intervention as well as the implications of articulation of post-structuralism and psychoanalysis in community work. It is suggested that psychoanalysis is best utilised in community settings when it explicitly recognises socio-political influences and includes these in the object-worlds of ourselves and our clients, and when recognition of power and difference are foregrounded. A further aim involved subjecting a Foucaultian discourse analytic method (e.g. Hollway, 1989) to a practical intervention in which there are multiple texts and in which the clinician becomes the discourse analyst. Whilst this method is no doubt controversial, it offers the potential to extend the use of post-structuralist methodology to the analysis of practical therapeutic encounters beyond the typical methods of analysing written or transcribed texts. Implications of this analysis thus hold bearing on future intervention as well as on future methods of researching psychological practice. 2015-03-13T14:11:21Z 2015-03-13T14:11:21Z 1999 Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/12606 eng application/pdf Department of Psychology Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Clinical Psychology
Long, Carol
"The baby will grow" : a poststructuralist and psychodynamic analysis of a community psychology intervention
thesis_degree_str Master's
title "The baby will grow" : a poststructuralist and psychodynamic analysis of a community psychology intervention
title_full "The baby will grow" : a poststructuralist and psychodynamic analysis of a community psychology intervention
title_fullStr "The baby will grow" : a poststructuralist and psychodynamic analysis of a community psychology intervention
title_full_unstemmed "The baby will grow" : a poststructuralist and psychodynamic analysis of a community psychology intervention
title_short "The baby will grow" : a poststructuralist and psychodynamic analysis of a community psychology intervention
title_sort the baby will grow a poststructuralist and psychodynamic analysis of a community psychology intervention
topic Clinical Psychology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/12606
work_keys_str_mv AT longcarol thebabywillgrowapoststructuralistandpsychodynamicanalysisofacommunitypsychologyintervention